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Alternate cover of Anthem of the Sun. A remixed version of Anthem of the Sun, supervised by Phil Lesh, was issued in 1972 (with the same product number, WS-1749), and can be identified by the letters RE after the master numbers. The remix particularly differs from the original in terms of segues, use of live recordings, and stereo imaging.
In 1988 "Melting Pot" was covered by New Zealand female vocal group and covers band When the Cat's Away. Their version peaked at number one in the New Zealand charts, and charted for 15 weeks. [9] The single was certified gold. [10] It was one of three songs by New Zealand artists to reach number one in 1988.
One of the few Grateful Dead songs to have lyrics written by Weir, "The Faster We Go, the Rounder We Get" became one of the Dead's most-played songs (being performed a known 586 times [2]) and most popular vehicles for improvisation, with some performances reaching 30+ minutes in length.
"Speed Me Up" is a song by American rappers Wiz Khalifa, Ty Dolla Sign, Lil Yachty, and Sueco the Child. Produced by Take a Daytrip , it was released by Atlantic Records on January 24, 2020 and featured on the soundtrack to the film Sonic the Hedgehog .
Jones left Memphis, Tennessee, where Stax was headquartered, and moved to California while guitarist Steve Cropper, also dissatisfied with the new Stax atmosphere, opened his own studio in Memphis, spending less and less time at the Stax studio. [1] Melting Pot was recorded in New York City, between M.G.'s gigs, as Jones refused to record in ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 30 December 2024. Anthem of Falange Española de las JONS Cara al Sol English: Facing the Sun Blas Piñar and Carlos García Juliá (in Falange uniform) sing Cara al sol in 1976 among a crowd making Roman salutes. Former unofficial anthem of Spain and anthem of Falange Lyrics José Antonio Primo de ...
"Wait 'Till the Sun Shines, Nellie" has been recorded many times and is now considered a pop standard. The first recorded versions were by Byron G. Harlan and Harry Tally. [4] On the August 15, 1929, strip of Thimble Theatre, Castor Oyl sings the song after he loses $10 million.
In 2012, Hunter co-wrote lyrics for the Mickey Hart Band's albums Mysterium Tremendum and the follow-up Superorganism. In an interview with American Songwriter , Hart categorized Hunter's lyrics compared to other great lyricists saying, "When you're in a situation in the future and you can't explain it, very often a Hunter line or two or three ...